Sabina Gold and Silver Corp., which is now moving into an environmental review, and Xstrata Zinc cite a proposed port at Bathurst Inlet as key to their respective company’s mining plans.

A recently-circulated information sheet on Xstrata’s Hackett River zinc mine project, still in advanced exploration, notes the project lies 75 kilometres south of a “potential deep-water port” at Bathurst Inlet.

The Hackett River project would produce 10,000 to 20,000 tonnes a day of zinc over 15 years, provide 800 jobs during construction and 500 when operating, with the zinc shipped out through the Northwest Passage, past Resolute and down the west coast of Baffin Island.

Sabina’s traffic at the port would include five to 10 ships per year during construction and three to five ships per year during operations.

The loading and unloading facilities would include a dock, jetty, moorings, and buoys.

On-land infrastructure would include a 55-million-litre fuel tank farm for bulk diesel storage at site, a 100-person camp and an airstrip.

Back River, which would take two years to build, operate for 10 to 15 years and then take five to close down, would hire 1,600 workers during the construction phase and 900 during the mine’s operations.

The project would also include open-pit and underground mines.

Last month, the Nunavut Impact Review Board recommended the Back River project, which would produce 300,000 to 400,000 ounces of gold a year, for a complete environmental review.

The Kitikmeot Inuit Association told the NIRB it was “pleased” to see the project move ahead, but the KIA has “concerns with air and water quality, engineering, and fish and wildlife habitat.”

They announced last October that they had entered into a Memorandum of Understanding to create a development trust.

The MOU sees Sabina paying about $1.4 million to an existing KIA fund that supports development and community projects in the Kitikmeot.

Sabina and the KIA also agreed that it would be mutually beneficial to enter into long-term Inuit land use agreements.

In a previous deal signed with the Nunavut Resources Corp., Sabina said it would give the group up to $2 million as “seed funding” to develop a work plan for joint infrastructure projects in the Kitikmeot, such as BIPAR.